stringtranslate.com

17th Parachute Engineer Regiment

The 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment (French: 17e Régiment de Génie Parachutiste, 17e RGP) is heir to the traditions of the 17th Colonial Engineer Regiment (French: 17e Régiment Colonial du Génie, 17eRGC) which fought illustriously during the Second World War . It is the only airborne engineer unit of the French Army forming the engineering component of the 11th Parachute Brigade and secures all the specific airborne engineering missions relative to para assaulting at the level of deep reconnaissance as well as operations relative to para demining and handling explosives. The regiment has been present non-stop since 1975 on all theatres of operations (Lebanon, Tchad, New Caledonia, French Guiana, Pakistan, Kurdistan, Kuwait, Cambodia, Somalia, Rwanda, Gabon, Mozambique, ex-Yugoslavia, Albania, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Mali and others). For its various combat operational deployments, the 17e RGP was cited 3 times at the orders of the armed forces, 2 times at the orders of the armed forces corps, and three of its combat companies cited at the orders of the armed forces ( 2nd combat company) in addition to armed forces corps (1st and 3rd combat companies).

History since 1870

Creation and different designations since 1944

Structure

The Regiment of volunteer paratroopers, the 17th Parachute Engineer Regiment is articulated in 6 combat companies and 1 detachment:

Mascot

The mascot of the regiment was initially the Golden eagle named "Bac Kan" [2] in reference to the first mission participation of the Airborne engineers in Indochina during the airborne operation "Lea" in October 1947.

Since 2014, the mascot is a Bald eagle named "Malizia", name of François Grimaldi ( said "François la Malice") who in the 13th century conquered the Rock of Monaco.

Traditions

The regiment wears wear the Red Beret. Regimental Colours:

17th Parachute Engineer Regiment insignia

Battle Honours:

Regimental Songs

Decorations

The regimental colors are decorated with:

The Fanions of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd combat companies are decorated with:

Battalion and Regimental Commanders since 1963

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.soldatsdefrance.fr/Liban_r11.html National Support Association for French and Foreign Soldiers in Operations
  2. ^ Terre information magazine numéro 183, avril 2007, p.51.
  3. ^ Site de la 11e BP
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-01-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ "Les traditions".